The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 23, 1943, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
i w n *' ' ^
Letters To Mimi
From Hor D?d
II IIIWHI...IW M U.I. inn
l)ear Miml:
'N Trouble with Roosevelt Admin*
Istratlon they've tried to push social
1 reforms to the extent of ncComplishA
lug lu ten years what should take
many years.
Take the race problem for example.
Klennot has dono the Negro considerably
moro harm than she has good.
Iloally, she hps done this race a
great Injustice. Hho and the Administration
have built up great hopes
of social equality and economic Independence
for Negroes that caunot and
will not bo realized for many generations.
(Ireat social changes come ubout
gradually and naturally. Our civilisation.
as It is today, is the product of
many hundreds of years. How could
the Negro be expected to accomplish
In a few years what It has taken the
whito man many yeurs to accomplish?
The Negro Isn't ready ,/or all that
tho Hoosevejts would bless him with
?nor would he know what to do with
It when ho got It. Just as no>v we
aren't ready for the regimentation,
beaurocracy and government control
thut has been forced on u*?and 1
trust God that we will never be read]!
for it.
When the /t^fTe wakes up to the
fact that these are idl? dream* and
that Eleanor can't make good all oi
her implied promises, he will be mor?
miserable than he has ever been.
Nobody wduts to see Justice giver
all races of ^people anymore than 1
do. Hitt the point I'm making is thai
the time Just Isn't ripe for 4 whole
wale change in the customs of civlllsa
Hon in the South, or In America, for
that matter. ^ v <>
You can spo with your own eyei
that the Negro has made rapid prog
ress within the last two or three de
cades. He has been provided wltl
better schools and educational faclll
ties and he ha* taken better udyant
age of them. He has Improved hh
economic position treinondously. H<
has gained some of that social con
ciousness that makes for a battel
citizen, Give him -time and he wll
gradually overcome all of his dlfficul
ties. ,
Jtut to force an issue down peo
1>1 oh throaty against their will wll
only bre^d animosity and hatred. 1
will only servo to stir up trouble
Time Is the great healer of all ill
and I say give it time and the wholi
thing will straighten out of its owl
k:
tmmmmmasamBmmmBBwmmmmmmmm'wmmmmmmsc.
' Deadline Set For
? Student Nurses
I wmd *
r High school graduate* who toslre
' atudent nurso training with pay Ht
St. -Elizabeths Hospital. Federal iustl\
tutlon for mental dlaordara, WashingI
ton, D. C.. have until September 91 to
t (tie application*, the United 8tatea
Civil Service Commlaalon, announced
* recentlg. .. i
Appointee* 'chosen by the written
teat receive room*, meal*, medical qt.
i tentlon. 92*8 a year, and yaluamld
. training In psychlatrip nuralng. After
. three year*, successful student* We
i granted certificates of graduation ^nd
. become eligible for promotion to
, graduate nurae position* In St SflUts
abuths and other Federal hoapltals at
) entrance salaries of $1,970 a year
. counting overtime compensation for
rithe 48-hour week.
I Information and application forms
I. for the Student Nurse esamlnatiop
are being furnished by the Commission's
Local Secretary, Mrs. M. |f.
Moore, located at Camden. Appllc'a1
tlonfc are also obtainable from most
t first or second class post offices, and
i from the United States Civil Service
H Commission, Washington 2ft, D. C. '
o Applications are not desired from
a portions already engaged in war wdrt
_ unless they may use higher skills as
student nurses. Appointments will be
made In accordance with War Manpower
Commission policies and employment
stabilization plans.
accord.
Too much Is being said about the
race Issue and It all started wlfh
Eleanor. The more It is stlred the
worse It stinks. Let's say less about
the whole thing and do more constructive
thinking. The less we publicly
flaunt the issue the better able
we will be to cope with the solution
when the time comes.
| Love,
| Your Dad.
P. S.: Wonder why F. D. R. doesn't
clip Eleanor's wings like he did those
'lot Wallace and Jones?
Life In WAACs
Is ? Busy One
Lt. Adeline Boland, Columbia,
WAAC recruiter, who la heraelf busy
helping to swell the ranks of women
on duty wHh the Army, recently thui
characterised the training and work
of the Women's Army Auxiliary corps
which Is now pressing toward lte goal
of 160,000 members " _
"The training of a member of the
Corps for the specialised work the
Array wants her to do Is not simply
a matter of teaching 'her to march and
to wear her . uniform properly," Lieut
Hoiand said. "There are houTs spent
in the classrooms under expert In
structors, too?hours of acquiring
technical abilities to fit herself to re
pluce a soldier In a non-combatant
duty."
The program keeps a WAAC busy
from the moment she enrolls until the
moipent she steps into a soldier's
place, she said.
"And the tasks she then assumes,
so that this flghtlhg man may go out
and fight, keeps her busy thereafter.
Of poqrse there Is time for recreation
and for social life, but since the Army
has opened many of its specialists
schQpla to the WAAC, and with the
W^kC's own schools now firmly
established, there is opportunity for
every; woman to learn a great deal
during her service with the oorpa." ,
"JCvery WAAC has equal opportunity
to be selected to attend an Officer
Candidate school at one of the Training
J Centers," Lt. Hoiand continued.
"And after graduation there are excello.-1
opportunities to attend one of
the Army's famous service schools
for additional training."
CITATION
The State of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw.
By N;' C. Arnett,
Probate Judge.
Whereas, H. S. Porter made suit to
me to grant Mrsf Jyoulse C. Proctor
and H. S. Porter Loiters of Administration
of the Estate and effects of
John Porter.
These are, Therefore, to cite and
admonish all and singular the Kindred
and Creditors of the said John
Porter, deceased, that they be and
appear before me, in the Court of Probate,
to be held at Camden, S. C., on
August 3, next, after publication hereof.
at 11 o'clock In the forenoon, to
show cause, If any they have, why
the said Administration Bhould not be
granted.
Given under my hand this 19th day
of July, Anno Domini, 1943. 18-19
N. C. Arnett,
Judge of Probate,
For Kershaw County.
A Western safety prize winner, having
driven a truck for years without
mishap, ascribes lt to sufficient sleep.
Hut not at the same hours.
Nationwide Molly W
Pitcher Tag Day
Washington, D. C.?On August 4th,
( Molly Pitcher is stepping out of the
?n# Am,rL
iiUKca
can history ?to
9ell War Bonds
Ed SUmpar. ^The
gal who carried
water to thirsty
Revolutionary
Battle of Monmouth
and took
over her hul?
band's cannon
when he was
wounded, has
long been a symbol of the herolam
of American women. '
In her honor, brigades of modern
Molly Pitchers will take their stnnd*
i on nation-wide Molly Pitcher Day at
, street corners, building ehttfencea,
and in public places to sell the bonds
and stamps that back up our modern
fighting men. _
A red-white-and-blue Molly Pitcher
Tag will be given W everyone
who purchases a Dond or stamp on
that day. Members of the American
Legion Auxiliary, and of the Independent
Food Distributors Council
unit of Molly Pitchers, will aid and
augment local Women's War Savings
Staffs to piake lip the volunt
teer sales fbfce. They will use water
pitchers to hold their supplies of tags
and War Stamps. The slogan on the
tags will read Fill the Pitcher with
Bonds and Stamps on Molly Pitcher
Day," and the goal of the sales force
will be to "tag" the total population.
"THEY SAID I KILLED THE
KING"
A Russian Princess tells how she
was kidnaped and nearly paid with
her life for the assassination of
Yugoslavia's ruler all because she
resembled a mysterious blonde. Rdhd
this extraordinary story in the July
25th issue of ^
The American Weekly
The Big Magazine distributed with the
BALTIMORE j
SUNDAY AMERICAN
Ask Your Dealer To Reserve Your
Copy
tlf Hitler wins, the issue
for you will be living itself
and not jest the cost of living.
Think that over and figure
it out for yourself how
much beyond 10 percent of
your family incohie you should pet
Into War Bonds every payday.
LT. JAMRI P. MONTQOMttoTl
ON OUTY AT TINKER Fig"* I
Oklahoma City Air Denm ?J|
Field, Okla.?Among the ottwJ!?!
duty at Tinker Field, okl? ull
Lieut. Jamee D. Montgomery fJ2l
ly of Camden. He la attach.??!
repair aquadron at this m<wKj31
llshdient of -the Air 8ervice
for the maintenance aud repUjIl
craft and tha training qL.au .vi
group*. r Tl|
Lieut. Montgomery is ihe eon arid
and Mrs. Jamee Bs Montgomery rJ
den. He la a graduate
High achpol and the Unlvefetb
Florida, and waa formerly
with the Commercial Bank ot X
den.
CORPORAL HALL LEADINQ
IN 8WIM MARATHON AT PO|r
(Continued from flrat page)
B?Thd*- enlisted men average ,
lengths per mail and Sgt. Hall ?2,
his record ot 105 lengths.
C?"D" Squadrou of Clgif i
smashed (he best average score ?
a high 45 lengths and Cadet Ua
wdod, M. 8. swam to a new c?
high of ?0 with Tec. Sgt. Groreri
kins In charge.
D?Tifednesday morning's clue
der Lt. Frank Bean, brought out ti
high cadet performers with Cidet
A. Lyle* having 92 lengths to I
credit and Cadet B. N. Locketti
E?Wednesday afternoon's torn
tion under Sgt. Harking, hroke k
the Squadron and Individual reea
The Squadron average was 47.U,
Cadet Campbell, A. J. broke the pre
ous individual record with a score
101. ;
Four groups have yet to swhi t
performances Are expected to he
creaslngly good. The motlyatl^1
hind the performances Is thattke
dividual and the Squadron haviofi
highest average will be excused^
the next cross country run. Beg
thus far have more than justified
arrangement..
1 .i.-. . frM
IMPORTANCE OF CLEAN
MILK 18 8TRE88ED
(Continued from first p?ge| ,
of lean beef round or 14 onsets i
American cheese."
Exhibits and charts added htgej
to the discussion and dempMrSfl
Attending the meetings were fad
women who sell surplus milk, cat]
munlty or neighborhood committal
men, older 4-H club memberaTtw
sentative for . each home demdaB
tion club, vocational agriculture! faM
home econoinlcs teachers, Jfcri jB
curlty borne and farm advisory ui
Negro farm and home demooibih3
agents. f
County Agent W. C. McCarlefijjn
Home Demonstration Agent Elr|>Ht|
B. Fewell were responsible for the]
plans and exhibits for the local fat]
onstratlon.
1 11 ' ?
FOR SALE
My brown Buick five passenger Roadmaster. Has
I been less than twenty-two thousand miles?excellent
condition. Five 6-ply tires in good condition.
Henry Savage, Jr.
CAMDEN, S. C.
- ...... -
Let's be RATIONal
About Shoe Returns-Exchanges
When purchasing shoes with Stamp No. 18 . . . make your firBt choice
the best choice possible! Be sure they fit you comfotably . . . and are j
the style you need and want. However, a shoe that tftelt comfortable
in our store but not at home ... a defective dhoe that we may overlook
... or a shoe that you are not satisfied with for any other reason
may be returned or exchanged ... j
11^ the shoes you bought don't fit, . . . AND you have been careful to walk J
JI-T on the carpet so we can re-sell them as new, you are entitled to exchange
them for another pair without giving up another stamp. If
; we cannot fit you, we will give you a Special Shoe Stamp with which
you may purchase shoes from any store. . . .
'
T?? you discover the shoes you bought are defective in workmanship or
If material and cannot be repaired, we can give you a statement testifying
to the fact, providing the ffooes are returned within 30 days of the
date of purchase. Your Rationing Board will give you a Special Shoe
Stamp for a new pair otf shoes upon presentation of our written statement.
TC s^oes y?u Stamp No. 18 in War Ration Book No. 1 prove
If unsatisfactory for any other reason, bring them back for an adjust- I
ment. If they show wear and we cannot re-sell them as new, we can
make a money adjustment, but we are unable to return your Stamp 18.
%
rr
This Newspaper, 1 Yr.
and
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Both For Prices Shown
All Magasiuts Art For 1 Y tar
i
American Fruit Grower__$2.25
American Girl 2.75
O American Home 2.75
CD American Magazine 3.25
G American Poultry Journal- 2.15
Better Cooking 3.60
Better Homea A Gardens- 2.75
Breeder's Gazette 2.50
Child Life 3.25
Christian Herald 3.00
Click 2.50
Collier's Weekly 3.60
Column Digest 3.25
Country Gentleman, 2 Yra. 2JO
Etude Music Magazine 3.50
Fact Digest 2.50
Farm Jrnl. A Frm's Wife- 2.15
Flower Grower 3.00
B Household Magazine 2.40
Hygeia 3.25
Liberty (Weekly) 4.10
Look (every other week) 3.25
Modern Romances 2.50
Modern Screen 2JO
Q Nature (16 its. 12 mos.)? 3JO
Official Detective Stories 3.00
! Open Roed (12 iss. 14 mo.) 2.75
Q Outdoors (12 iss. 14 mo.)? 2JO
Parents' Magazine 3.00
Q Pathfinder (weekly) 2.50
Popular Mechanics 3.75
Progressive Farmer . 2.15
Redbook Magazine 3.25
. Science A Discovery 2.50
Screenland 2.75
Silver Screen ?. 2.75
I G Southern Agriculturist 2.15
1 Q Sports Afield 2.75
G Successful Farming 2.25
O True Story 2 JO
Q The Woman ? 2.60
O Woman's Home Comp. 2.75
54Vf MONEY!
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Pick your favorites and
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R*|nlor ALL 99 C
Volo* SIX A M ./ J
S4.50 ONLY i?B j
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This Nowtpopor I Yr. j
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American Fruit Grower?1 Yr.
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^^lefcJLfresU><^^ a
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